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Trump touts space plan likened to ‘Star Wars’

- BEN RILEY-SMITH

Space is the new arena for war, Donald Trump said Thursday, as he announced a major drive to update America’s missile defence system and touted his “Space Force” proposal.

The U.S. president said he wanted a “layer” of sensors in space that can detect missile launches and that he would demand the technology was funded in his next budget.

The item was one of a host of improvemen­ts the Pentagon wants to make to its decades-old missile defence system, outlined Thursday in a new review.

It drew comparison to Ronald Reagan’s costly and ambitious project to create a space-based anti-missile system at the height of the Cold War in the 1980s, which was derisively dubbed “Star Wars” by critics.

Speaking at the Pentagon, Trump explained the new strategy and insisted that now was the time to modernize to keep America safe.

“Our goal is simple: To ensure we can detect and destroy any missile launched against the United States, anywhere, anytime, anyplace,” he said.

The review picked out four countries that pose a missile threat to Americans on home soil — North Korea, Iran, Russia and China — and warned that adversarie­s were rapidly developing their programs.

It said that North Korea posed an “extraordin­ary threat,” in contrast to Trump’s declaratio­n after meeting its leader Kim Jong Un last year that “there is no longer a nuclear threat.” “We have some very bad players out there,” Trump said. “We’re a good player. But we can be far worse than anybody if need be.”

Trump named six priorities: putting the defence of Americans first; developing new technologi­es; being prepared for all types of missile attacks; recognizin­g space is now in play; removing obstacles to U.S. projects; and demanding “burden sharing” from America’s allies.

It was his comments on space that especially raised eyebrows. “We will recognize that space is a new war– fighting domain, with the Space Force leading the way,” the president said.

Space Force is Trump’s proposal for a free-standing military department focused specifical­ly on space. Currently such issues largely fall under the U.S. Air Force.

The move has faced some opposition in the Pentagon, including from James Mattis, the former defence secretary, over whether the major reorganiza­tion needed for its creation would bring enough benefit.

Trump said Thursday that his next budget will invest in a “space-based missile defence layer.” U.S. officials have suggested a layer of sensors in space would help detect missiles moving at hypersonic speeds.

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